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Two winter storms bring 29 million people under warnings with frozen conditions to come

Two winter storms will bring snow, an icy rain and coldarctic cold in a two -time blow this week.

From coast to coast, more than 96 million people were covered by winter clocks, warnings and advice. From Missouri to West Virginia there were more than 26 million people under winter weather advice that warn of light snow, risk of driving and smooth roads.

Warnings also concentrated on the central levels, the middle west, the Ohio-Valley and the Mid Atlantic. This includes winter storm warnings, winter storm clocks and extreme cold and freezing warnings.

A third storm that turns a low pressure system in the cold Pacific was forecast to drive subtropical rainfall from Hawaii in California, with flooding, mud flows and debris flows for fire communities, earth scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.

The first storm will take shape in the central level, with rain and light icing in Oklahoma and Arkansas. On Tuesday, the storm produces a moderate snow from Kentucky to Maryland.

The middle Atlantic is given the greatest snow sums, with 3 to 6 inches. Locally higher amounts of up to 8 inches cannot be excluded. Washington, DC and Baltimore are expected to absorb 4 to 6 inch snow with an ice glaze, and Philadelphia could get 2 to 3 inches.

The emergency department of New York City said on Monday in a weather warning that 1 to 2 inch snow is expected on Tuesday and Wednesday, with 4 inches in some parts of the city.

“We also ask everyone to check their neighbors, especially those who may need additional support in the coming days,” said Zach ISCOL, representative of the Nemergency management, in an explanation.

The mayor of Washington, Muriel Bowser, announced in a statement that the city’s snow team, which uses 136 snow plows and 10 hollows to put them into practice, is put into practice to present roads with snow-covering salt.

The south side of the storm system will bring the possibility of a heavy rain on Tuesday and Wednesday to the south, where 1 to 3 inch rain with locally higher quantities is possible.

The weather forecast center of the National Weather Service has issued a low risk of excessive rainfall in parts of the Southern Plains and the Lower Mississippi Valley from Tuesday to Wednesday morning. The cities that pay attention to possible urban floods include Shreveport, Louisiana; Jackson, Mississippi; Birmingham, Alabama; Atlanta; Knoxville, Tennessee; and Asheville, North Carolina.

The arctic cold air also brings the temperatures of 25 to 40 degrees below average over the northern Rocky Mountains and the northern plateau.

The Weather Service Office in Boulder, Colorado, said that “the main part of Arctic air” arrives on Wednesday and that it will mean temperature height in teenage. In the meantime, the Weather Service Office in Bismarck, North Dakota, said life -threatening wind cold of minus 55 degrees Fahrenheit are forecast from Monday evening to Tuesday morning.

The second storm begins on Tuesday evening with light snow in Colorado, Nebraska and Kansas. By Wednesday, Kansas will produce moderate to strong snow from Michigan, with the snow for the large U -Bahn areas of Kansas City, Missouri. Des Moines, iowa; Chicago; Milwaukee; and Detroit.

“These storms are serious and they could be dangerous,” said Kansas City, Missouri, Mayor Quinton Lucas at a press conference on Monday. “So we ask you, especially on Wednesday, when it looks like we have the hardest snow if you don’t have to take to the street … make sure you don’t need it.”

Mike Kehoe, governor of Missouri, signed an executive order on Monday that helps his office prepare the state for the weather. It includes relaxed regulations for the shipping of heating materials for dormitories and the approval to call the Missouri National Guard if necessary.

In Chicago, the heaviest snow is forecast during commuting on Wednesday evening. It is too early to predict how much “we compare the four models, but we get between 4 and 8 inch snow,” said the NBC Chicago meteorologist Alicia Roman.

On Thursday, the storm will leave Canada and bring the snow to the north of New England and rain in the intergovernmental 95 corridor from Boston to Raleigh, North Carolina.

Some strong to heavy storms will also be possible on Thursday along the Florida Panhandle, Southern Alabama, South Georgia and Coastal South Carolina.

A winter mix of snow and icy rain could lead to an ice accumulation of a tenth inches in the Ozarks in the Ozarks on Wednesday evening in Central/East of Ozarks, according to the weather service.

The agency warned that trips will become extremely dangerous, especially during commuting on Tuesday evening, because a winter storm spreads over the central Appalaches and the middle Atlantic states from Tuesday to Wednesday.

The storm of the week in California in California is expected to arrive on Thursday in the San Francisco region on Thursday and will give its biggest rain on Thursday morning when he urges the interior of the country and reached the night in South California on Thursday afternoon. It could be accompanied by wind gusts of 40 to 50 miles per hour in mountain areas, they said.

“Let me summarize the week with a personal note,” wrote the meteorologist of the national weather service Dylan Flynn on Monday in the forecast discussion of the San Francisco region. “I train the local high school track team, and we plan to run through rain Wednesday and Friday, but will cancel the training on Thursday.”

Even when the Mayor of Los Angeles announced on Monday that a second phase of the removal of ruins this week begins for the Pacific Palisades community, which was destroyed by the largest of the fatal fires of the last month, the emergency management department warned City in a explanation that fire scardes are “susceptible to dangerous floods and even sludge cases.”

The center for western weather and water texts in Scripps describes the atmospheric flow of precipitation as a moderate AR-2 storm on a scale with a weak to increasing 1-5, whereby fall flood is possible. It will probably go south to San Diego, where, according to the weather service, the weather service will probably arrive on Thursday and Friday after a smaller “Insider Slider” government storm on Wednesday.

“This will definitely be our most damp storm period last year,” said the office in San Diego in its forecast discussion on Monday.

Since it was relatively warm, subtropical rainfall, the Pacific Sturm was not expected that it is a large snow producer, with an 8,000 foot snow-free for South California mountains on Thursday, the weather service says. The highest range of the Sierra Nevada range in the north could reach 2 to 4 feet, but said federal forecasts in Reno, Nevada.

The waves of the weather come from a large winter storm that swept through the middle west and the northeast over the weekend.

The weather at the weekend has covered a large part of the northeast in white. The New York Central Park was covered with a dust of fresh powder, as was Boston’s skyline. Boston Logan’s international airport logged 5.5 inches in 24 hours until Sunday evening.

The weather also led to travel resolutions – including accidents on icy roads in several states and more than 3,000 domestic flight delays on Sunday.

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